Developmental biology and cytogenetics of B. xylophilus


Autoria(s): Hasegawa, Koichi; Mota, Manuel; FUTAI, Kazuyoshi; MIWA, Johji
Data(s)

10/12/2012

10/12/2012

2008

Resumo

The pine wood nematode Bursaphelenchus xylophilus reproduces bisexually: a haploid sperm fertilizes a haploid oocyte, and the two pronuclei rearrange, move together, fuse, and begin diploid development. Early embryonic events taking place in the B. xylophilus embryo are similar to those of Caenorhabditis elegans, although the anterior-posterior axis appeares to be determined oppositely to that observed for C. elegans. Thai is, in the B. xylophilus embryo, the male pronucleus emerges at the future anterior end, whereas the female pronucleus appeares laterally. To understand the evolution of nematode developmental systems, we cloned the full length of Bx-tbb-1 (beta tubulin) from B. xylophilus cDNA and attempted to apply reverse genetics analysis to B. xylophilus. Several lengths of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) for the Bx-tbb-1 gene were synthesized by in vitro transcription, and both B. xylophilus and C. elegans were soaked in dsRNA for RNAi. Both nematodes could suck up the dsRNA, and we could detect the abnormal phenotypes caused by Bx-tbb-1 dsRNA in C. elegans, but not in B. xylophilus. We suspect that systemic RNAi might be suppressed in B. xylophilus and are attempting to establish other methods for functionally analyzing B. xylophilus genes.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6794

91-100

ICAAM

nd

mmota@uevora.pt

nd

nd

218

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Caenorhabditis elegans #Bursaphelenchus xylophilus #CYTOGENETICS
Tipo

bookPart